Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Netflix Revenue Levers Now Subscriptions, Ads (One-Time Breakup Fee is Significant)

A Netflix acquisition of Warner Brothers Discovery was thought to be a way for Netflix to begin broadening its revenue base in merchandising and experiences, captured in an perhaps-overly-broad but directionally correct view that “Netflix had to become Disney.” 


Now that Netflix has withdrawn its bid, perhaps the focus now shifts to less-splashy endeavors: advertising; some merchandising; gaming and some forms of experiential products. 


But boosts to subscription revenue are far and away the most-lucrative immediate opportunities, far outstripping all other new revenue streams put together. 


Advertising is the next-most immediate opportunity. Netflix's ad revenue grew more than 2.5 times in 2024 compared to over $1.5 billion in 2025, and the company expects it to nearly double again to roughly $3 billion in 2026, contributing $1.5 billion or so in incremental revenue in 2026. 


But that pales in comparison to the $11 billion boost higher subscription revenues represent, or even the one-time deal breakup fee of $2.8 billion it will receive from Warner Brothers Discovery. 


None of the other likely sources are going to be material, and “move the revenue needle” significantly.


Growth Initiative

2025 Baseline

Near-Term Potential

Time Horizon

Confidence

Ad-Tier Revenue

~$1.5B

~$3B (2026); $8B by 2030

1–2 years

High — company-guided doubling

Subscription Pricing / Mix

$45B total rev

$50.7B–$51.7B guided for 2026

1 year

High — management guidance

Live Sports Ad Inventory (NFL, WWE, MLB)

~$25–35M/game

Rapid expansion as slate grows

1–3 years

High — proven CPM premium

Ad Tech / First-Party Data Monetization

Nascent

Meaningful CPM lift as targeting improves

1–2 years

Medium-High — infrastructure being built

Pause Ads & Interactive Formats

In testing

Incremental on top of $3B ad base

1–2 years

Medium — new format, uptake uncertain

International Subscriber Growth

325M global subs

Sub-50% CTV penetration globally

2–4 years

Medium-High — structural tailwind

Gaming

Negligible revenue

Optionality; FIFA sim could be material

3–5 years

Medium — early stages

Video Podcasting

Early

Gen Z engagement; ad inventory upside

2–4 years

Medium

Netflix House / Experiential

Pre-revenue

Long-term brand/licensing upside

4+ years

Low-Medium near term

$2.8B WBD Breakup Fee

One-time windfall

Funds buybacks / content investment

Immediate

Realized

Share Buybacks (EPS Accretion)

Paused in 2025

$8B authorization; $11B FCF projected

1–2 years

High — capital allocation signal

Content Licensing to Rivals

Existing

Incremental as Sony/Universal/Paramount deals expand

1–3 years

Medium

Which Market Structure for Generative AI Models?

It is impossible to know the ultimate market structure for generative artificial intelligence models, especially if they emerge as “operating environments” (the layer where users spend their time and developers build their apps) in enterprise or consumer segments of the market. 


But it is fair to note that hyperscaler capital investment suggests the contestants believe a “winner takes most” outcome is likely. 


Monopoly; duopoly or oligopoly all are possible outcomes, albeit with the possibility that open source remains the “monopoly” in some parts of the market, as does Linux for supercomputers and servers, even if desktops and mobile devices have duopoly or monopoly market structures. 


It is fair to argue that suppliers believe an oligopoly outcome is the floor; duopoly a likely outcome and a monopoly, though possible, unlikely. 


The “monopoly” market structure seems the most likely in enterprise portions of the market (like “Windows”). The consumer market could easily become a duopoly (like iOS and Android). 


The infrastructure portion of the market (high-performance computing as a service) seems most likely to develop as an oligopoly. 


Outcome Type

Primary Driver

Likely Winner(s)

Impact on You

Duopoly

Ecosystem Lock-in

Apple vs. Google/OpenAI

High switching costs; "Blue vs. Green" bubble dynamics.

Monopoly

Corporate Standards

Microsoft (OpenAI)

Universal compatibility; slower innovation over time.

Oligopoly

Interoperability

OpenAI, Anthropic, Meta, Google

High competition; lower prices; constant feature wars.


Monday, March 9, 2026

R.I.P. Danny Tarampi

Danny Tarampi, proprietor of Gunther Glass Surfboards, passed away recently. As a friend quipped recently, “none of us gets out of here alive.” 


His shop was in Northridge (Roscoe and Reseda Blvd.) near Cal State Northridge University. Danny shaped my favorite board of all time, a 9’6” longboard. I once bought a shortboard from him, partly in cash and partly with an eight-track tape player! 


I acquired the nickname “Gunther” from my surfing buddies Chuck and Bill. As I recall, Danny surfed Malibu, as we all did, but I think he also rode at Secos (Will Rodgers) and County Line. 


As virtually everyone says, he was a super nice guy, quick with a smile. He moved to Hawaii at some point after I left California, after his wife died, I am told. 

Danny Tarampi


Thanks, Danny. It was great to meet you. The last time I saw him he was paddling out at Malibu. Fitting.


Will Robotaxis be Cheaper than Human-Driver Ridesharing?

Lots of people predict that automated vehicles used to support robotaxis will be more affordable for customers than human drivers and ridesharing. 


In some cases, perhaps yes. In other cases, perhaps no. 


source: BCG 


The simple logic is that since human driver wages can account for 60 percent or more of ride-hailing operational costs, automated vehicle fleets could reduce supplier costs, and lead to lower consumer pricing. 


Projections from investment analyses suggest that at scale, robotaxi fares could drop to as low as $0.25-$0.50 per mile, undercutting the $0.70 per mile for personal car ownership and the $2 to $3 per mile for current UberX rides. 


Ark Invest certainly agrees with the thesis.  


 But, for the moment, it depends. 


In San Francisco, Waymo rides have averaged 31 percent to 41 percent more than comparable Uber or Lyft trips, though Tesla's early robotaxi offerings have come in cheaper at around $8.17 per ride on average. Other studies suggest the opposite. 


In principle, some scenarios seem to support the argument for lower autonomous vehicle costs, with the possibility that rider fares could be lower. 


Robotaxis can achieve cost advantages through automation's core efficiencies:


That might be true especially for:

  • High-density urban areas with strong demand: In cities like San Francisco or Austin, where rides are frequent and vehicles can minimize idle time

  • Long-distance or high-utilization trips: For routes over 10-20 miles, robotaxis avoid human limitations like breaks or shift changes, potentially reducing costs by 50% or more over time

  • Projections indicate profitability at $0.50 per mile within 4-5 years, making them cheaper than personal cars for families driving 10,000 miles annually (saving ~$5,000/year)

  • Subsidized rollouts. Companies like Tesla are initially undercutting competitors with aggressive pricing to gain market share, similar to Uber's early strategies

  • Electrification and scale economies. Fully electric fleets reduce fuel costs dramatically, and as adoption grows (potentially doubling global miles traveled by 2030), per-ride overheads like insurance and maintenance dilute. McKinsey estimates a 50-percent drop in per-mile costs by 2030 in these optimized setups.


In other cases, the opposite might happen, as human driver services have advantages over robotaxis:

  • Early deployment or low-demand Areas. In nascent markets or suburban/rural zones with sparse rides, vehicles sit idle more, spreading fixed costs (e.g., $0.30-$0.50 per mile for operations) over fewer trips. Waymo's San Francisco rides average $20.43 vs. $14-15 for Lyft/Uber, a premium driven by expensive hardware and limited scale. During rush hours, inefficiencies like cautious driving add $9-11 extra compared to human services.

  • Short trips or inefficient routing. For distances under two miles, robotaxis can charge disproportionately more per kilometer due to minimum fares, detours for safety, or slower responses to traffic.

  • Premium or safety-focused services. Some riders pay more for the novelty or perceived safety.  In areas with bad weather, complex traffic, or high accident risks, added insurance and maintenance could keep fares elevated. Regulatory requirements for human oversight (e.g., remote monitoring) also add labor costs, keeping robotaxis pricier than unsupervised human drives in the near term

  • Monopolistic or regulated markets. If a single provider dominates, they might price at $0.50 per mile for higher margins rather than passing all savings to riders. Local regulations or other offsetting forces, such as strong union opposition, also might have an effect. 


So potential prices for riders might vary: higher for some use cases; lower for others. 


Netflix Revenue Levers Now Subscriptions, Ads (One-Time Breakup Fee is Significant)

A Netflix acquisition of Warner Brothers Discovery was thought to be a way for Netflix to begin broadening its revenue base in merchandisin...